Portugal’s biggest property surprise in 2026 isn’t just that Lisbon is expensive — it’s how extreme the gap has become. In Santo António, homes average €11,070 per m², while Portugal’s national average sits at €3,551 per m². That means the priciest Lisbon neighbourhood is running at more than 3x the countrywide benchmark.
The top end of the market is clearly concentrated in the capital. Avenidas Novas has the highest average asking price at €1,432,768, while Parque das Nações is close behind at €9,749 per m². Even outside the very top tier, places like Campolide (€8,401/m²) and Estrela (€8,189/m²) stay firmly in luxury territory, showing how tightly clustered Portugal’s premium market is.
On the other side of the ledger, the cheapest locations can be misleading. Realty Pulse’s data covers 209 Portuguese locations, and some low headline prices are distorted by land-heavy listings with very large plots, which can push price-per-square-metre figures down. So while rural markets may look affordable at first glance, the underlying property mix matters a lot.
The takeaway: in Portugal, “cheap” and “expensive” aren’t just about geography — they’re about the type of property being sold. Lisbon dominates the premium segment, but the lower end needs a careful read before drawing conclusions.
Read the full analysis with interactive charts and district-level data on Realty Pulse
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